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From:
Fye samateh <[log in to unmask]>
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Wed, 11 Jun 2008 11:27:05 +0200
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**
The world food crisis and the capitalist market Part Three By Alex Lantier
10 June 2008

*Use this version to
print*<http://www.wsws.org/articles/2008/jun2008/food-j10_prn.shtml>
* | Send this link by email <http://www.wsws.org/cgi-bin/birdcast.cgi> | Email
the author <https://secure.wsws.org/phpform/use/comments/form1.html>*

*This is the third and concluding part of a series of articles on the world
food crisis. Part
one<http://www.wsws.org/articles/2008/jun2008/food-j07.shtml>was
posted June 7. Part
two <http://www.wsws.org/articles/2008/jun2008/food-j09.shtml> appeared on
June 9.*

The current food crisis reflects not only financial events of recent years,
but longer-term policies of world imperialism. Instead of allowing for a
planned improvement of infrastructure and farming techniques, globalization
on a capitalist basis has resulted in a restriction in many parts of the
world of farm production. This has been carried out in order to lessen
competition and prevent market gluts from harming the profit interests of
the major powers.

One major aspect of imperialist policy was to limit farm production in the
so-called "First World" to prevent sudden falls in world prices. In the US,
this policy took the form of the federal government's Conservation Reserve
Program, first passed as part of the 1985 Food Security Act.

The program allows farmers to apply for payments of $50 per acre of land on
which they do not plant crops. A nationwide limit of 180,000 square
kilometers (about 10 percent of US arable land) was imposed on the program,
later decreased to 130,000 square kilometers in 2007.

Though the bill was presented as a means of limiting soil erosion due to
overplanting of ecologically vulnerable land, much of the fallow land
registered under the project was not, in fact, vulnerable to erosion, but
rather chosen by farmers on the basis of the price of the crops that could
be grown on it. This was in line with the law's stated objectives, which
were "acreage reduction" and the maintenance of "target prices and
price-support loans."

Similar payments to farmers for farmland kept out of cultivation were
adopted on a country-by-country basis, after the 1992 reform of Europe's
Common Agricultural Policy.

Production collapsed in the former Soviet bloc after the 1991 dissolution of
the USSR, as planned Soviet industries were shut down and sold off by the
Stalinist rulers and their Western economic advisers. According to UN Food
and Agriculture Organization (FAO) statistics, agricultural production in
the former USSR fell 38 percent in the first four years after its
dissolution and per capita food production fell 40 percent. Today, even
after a partial economic recovery starting around 2000, largely fueled by
oil and gas sales, total planted area in the former USSR is 12 percent less
than in Soviet times.

The collapse of the Soviet agricultural machinery industry and the
disappearance of Soviet subsidies tore into the farm sectors of
Soviet-aligned states. According to US Department of Agriculture (USDA)
figures, Cuban agricultural production fell 54 percent and food consumption
fell 36 percent from 1989 to 1994, and North Korean grain production fell 40
percent from 1990 to 1999.

In developing countries, agriculture and infrastructure were devastated by
export surges from wealthy countries and the programs of the International
Monetary Fund (IMF), which largely dictated state policy in exchange for
loans to help with the states' debt. As agriculture was converted away from
regulated subsistence farming and toward free-market cash crops produced for
export, developing countries were opened up as export destinations and had
more export revenue siphoned off to service debts to "First World" banks.

Liberalization of "Third World" markets and their opening to imperialist
power exports devastated local farmers, whose products were forced to
compete with highly subsidized exports. The US spends approximately $20
billion and the EU €45 billion per year on export subsidies to keep their
farm prices low in foreign markets. In Haiti, liberalization of agricultural
markets from 1985 to 1999 resulted in a 40 percent fall in domestic rice
production, from 163 kilotons to 100 kilotons, while US imports grew from 4
percent to 63 percent of the Haitian rice market.

IMF programs eliminated state regulation of the food supply and provision of
subsidies for fertilizer, irrigation and vaccines, which the IMF declared an
unacceptable drain on state funds. World production of cash crops such as
coffee, tobacco and cocoa soared, but entire populations became more
vulnerable to famine. In the 1980s, Africa's per capita grain production
fell from 150 to 125 kilograms, while its grain imports went from 3.72
megatons (Mt) in 1974 to 8.47 Mt in 1993.

In Somalia, the IMF-mandated 1981 devaluation of the Somali shilling led to
massive price hikes for imported fertilizer and livestock vaccines, and the
government progressively slashed subsidies for farmers and nomadic herders.
A 1991 collapse in livestock herds due to disease and a resulting fall in
farm production were important factors leading to the 1992 famine, which was
then used to justify a US invasion of the country.

In Kenya, long a major African food exporter, the IMF-mandated 1996 reform
of the National Cereals and Produce Board (NCPB) devastated the economy and
transformed Kenya into a net importer of food. Under pressure to function as
a commercial, for-profit enterprise, the NCPB charged more for farm inputs
and allowed middlemen to take over much of the storage and distribution of
the harvest to cut distribution costs. By 2001, farmers were receiving 400
shillings from private traders for a 90-kg bag of rice costing 719 shillings
to produce.

In Malawi, IMF-mandated deregulation of the state grain market led to an
explosion in the number of private traders. When flooding hit the country's
maize crop in 2001, the state, under pressure to raise funds as
international donors such as the US and UK refused to give aid, sold off its
strategic grain reserve to traders at one third of the world market price.
Prices rose through the end of 2001 as traders hoarded the grain, and the
country experienced a major famine in 2002.

The poor state of much of "Third World" agricultural infrastructure after
decades of such treatment is common knowledge, though rarely discussed in
the mass media. In a March 2004 address, FAO Director-General Jacques Diouf
noted: "Africa is the only region in the world in which average per-capita
food production has been constantly falling for the past 40 years.... There
are many causes for this. There is, for example, the insignificant use of
modern inputs, with only 22 kg of fertilizer applied to each hectare of
arable land, compared to 144 kg in Asia. The level is even lower in
sub-Saharan Africa, which uses 10 kg per hectare.

"The selected seeds that spurred the success of the Green Revolution [the
increase in crop productivity during the 1960s and 1970s] in Asia and in
Latin America are barely used in Africa. There is also a profound shortage
of rural roads and storage and processing facilities.

"Another factor strongly influencing [Africa's] poor agricultural
performance is water. It* *only uses 1.6 percent of its available water
reserves for irrigation, as compared to 14 percent in Asia. Only 7 percent
of Africa's cropland is irrigated against 40 percent in Asia, and if we
exclude the five most developed countries in this regard—Morocco, Egypt,
Sudan, Madagascar and South Africa—the proportion for the remaining 48
countries drops to 3 percent. Yields from irrigated crops are three times
higher than yields from rain-fed crops, but agricultural activity on 93
percent of Africa's arable land is dependent on extremely erratic rainfall,
and therefore seriously exposed to the risk of drought. Eighty percent of
food emergencies are linked to water, especially water stress."

Nor are infrastructure difficulties limited to Africa. In Asia, the
International Rice Research Institute (IRRI) noted reduced research
investment, the lack of new irrigation projects, and "inadequate
maintenance" of existing irrigation infrastructure as major problems. It
added that an "unexploited yield gap of 1-2 tons per hectare currently
exists in most farmers' fields in rice-growing areas of Asia," citing lack
of proper irrigation and fertilizer, pest and disease control, post-harvest
storage and transport facilities.

According to the *India Times*, spring harvest yields for rice are 3.12 tons
per hectare (t/ha) in India, as opposed to 4.17 t/ha on average in Asia and
6.26 t/ha in China. In wheat, India produces 2.6 t/ha, below China's 4.1
t/ha and Europe's 5.0 t/ha. The *Times* noted that rural development
expenditure averaged 14.5 percent in 1986-1990, but after the 1991
liberalization and opening to international capital, this fell to 6 percent.
Agricultural productivity growth fell from 2.62 percent to 0.5 percent.

While agriculture in China is more productive than in India, it faces its
own challenges. Uncoordinated industrialization has decreased land available
for farming from 127.6 to 121.7 million hectares, according to figures from
the Ministry of Land and Resources. This is despite the passage of repeated
measures by the central government to limit land sales by farmers to local
officials aiming to set up factories or businesses on prime farmland. Land
near factories, many of which are operated with little regard for
environmental standards, is often severely polluted.

As the crisis of world agriculture pushes supply downward, population growth
and rising demand for more complex foods in industrializing countries are
pushing demand upward. This dichotomy between powerful objective
developments in world capitalism gives the crisis a particularly intractable
and explosive character.

The increased food demand caused by population growth does not in general
pose a major problem. Population growth in this decade (roughly 1.2 percent
per year) has been less than growth in the 1960s, which averaged 2 percent
per year—a time when, thanks to crop productivity and infrastructure
improvements, world grain production per capita rose from 275 to 300 kg.

As a result of lower agricultural and research investment, however, crop
yield growth has fallen precipitously and is now barely keeping up with
population growth. The Washington, D.C.-based International Food Policy
Research Institute (IFPRI) comments: "The neglect of agriculture in public
investment, research, and service policies over the past decades has
undermined its key role for economic growth. As a result, agricultural
productivity growth has declined and is too low to meet the present
challenges." From 1980 to 2004, it fell from a high of 4.5 percent to 2.0
percent for wheat, 3.3 percent to 1.0 percent for maize, and 3.2 percent to
1.5 percent for rice, according to UN figures.

To the social and industrial problems underlying slow growth of the food
supply, one must add rising demand tied to substantial shifts in the global
economy—notably the increase in oil revenues in oil-producing countries and
industrialization in a number of developing countries, especially in Asia.

Available data does not suggest that major oil producers that are
traditional importers of grain (e.g., Saudi Arabia, Nigeria) have
contributed to price rises by importing more grain. The tonnage of their
rice and wheat imports have, in fact, shrunk in the last few years,
according to USDA figures—in part because grain importers refused to buy
from high-priced world grain markets as the state fixed low bread prices.

However, these countries' surging oil revenues—oil prices in US dollars have
gone up by a factor of more than 6 from 2002 to 2008—have greatly increased
market expectations that grain importers will be able to afford to pay large
sums for rice, wheat and other foods.

Rising living standards and more meat- and dairy-intensive diets in certain
developing countries have increased demand for grain—not only for food, but
particularly for feed. According to the International Feed Industry
Federation, world use of grain in compound animal feeds passed from 290 Mt
in 1975 to 537 Mt in 1994 and 626 Mt in 2005. The FAO forecasts a 60 percent
growth in grain use for feed from 1996 to 2030, compared to 45 percent
growth in grain use for food.

Compared to 1990 per capita levels, China in 2005 consumed 2.4 times as much
meat, 3.0 times as much milk and 2.3 times as much fish. India consumed 1.2
times as much per capita in all categories in 2005 as in 1990. Brazil
consumed 1.7 times more meat, 1.2 times as much milk, and 0.9 times as much
fish per capita in 2005 as in 1990.

These increases are important in absolute as well as comparative terms. For
instance, meat consumption in China in 2007 was 50 kg per person, versus 20
kg in 1980. By comparison, US per capita consumption in 2004 was 98 kg.

The increasingly unstable balance of production and consumption is further
threatened by global warming. In a February 2007 article, the Toronto-based
*Globe and Mail* described a Consultative Group on International
Agricultural Research (CGIAR) report painting a dire picture of its effect
on grain yields.

It wrote: "A rough rule of thumb developed by crop scientists is that, for
every 1-degree Celsius increase in temperatures above the mid-30s during key
stages in the growing season, such as pollination, yields fall about 10 per
cent." It added that, "Average global temperatures will likely rise between
1.1 and 6.4 degrees over the next century, according to the authoritative
Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, suggesting that, over most of the
range of future temperatures, crops will suffer problematic declines."

The CGIAR report described computer models analyzing crop yields in
regions—the northern half of the Indian subcontinent, Southeast Asia, and
the Sahel (the part of Africa just south of the Sahara desert)—where
temperatures often reach 35 degrees Celsius or higher during crop-growing
seasons.

The *Globe and Mail* concluded, "Cereals and corn production in Africa are
at risk, as is the rice crop in much of India and Southeast Asia.... The
best wheat-growing land in the wide arc of fertile farmland stretching from
Pakistan through Northern India and Nepal to Bangladesh would be decimated.
Much of the area would become too hot and dry for the crop, placing the food
supply of 200 million people at risk."

An advance look at global warming's possible effects is provided in
Australia by two straight years of droughts, which the Australian press has
widely noted are exacerbated by global warming. Wheat yields have fallen
from a normal level of 25 Mt to 10.6 Mt in 2007 and an anticipated yield of
13 Mt in 2008.

*Conclusion*

The scale of the challenges posed to world agriculture, and the dimensions
of the inflationary crisis that has already been unleashed on the world's
population despite the plentiful supply of food, underscore the
irrationality of world capitalism.

Divided as they are between the competing profit interests of different
corporations and states, capitalist policymakers are unable to rationally
and coherently plan world economy and agriculture to face these challenges.
Instead, they have overseen the destruction or degradation of immense
productive resources.

These basic contradictions are now exacerbated and brought to a crisis point
by the bursting of the US credit bubble and the rise in oil prices. Despite
humanity's elementary need for affordable food, the response of the world
bourgeoisie has been to use the price crisis as a source of profits through
speculation, smuggling or organizing nationally based price cartels.

The wave of strikes and demonstrations with which the international working
class has responded to the explosion of food prices testifies to its
objective unity, in opposition to the forces of the world market.

To the perplexity and token measures of capitalist governments and
imperialist-dominated agencies such as the UN, the working class must
counterpose the revolutionary perspective of international socialism. The
social force that is uniquely capable of resolving the crisis on a humane
and progressive basis is the international working class, uniting behind it
the peasantry and all other oppressed social layers.

The historic task posed to the working class is the reorganization of world
economy on an international basis, overcoming the conflict between
globalized production and the nation state system, and the replacement of
the profit principle by scientifically planned production for the social
good, on the basis of public ownership of the means of production under the
democratic control of the working population.

*Concluded*

 Top of page <http://www.wsws.org/articles/2008/jun2008/food-j10.shtml#top>

 The WSWS invites your
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